Using Personality Facets to Understand the Nature of Personality-Satisfaction Relationships Findings from Meta-Analytic Bifactor Latent Modeling
Künye
SELTZER Benjamin K., Deniz S. ÖNEŞ & Arkun TATAR. "Using Personality Facets to Understand the Nature of Personality-Satisfaction Relationships Findings from Meta-Analytic Bifactor Latent Modeling". Career Development International, 22.5 (2017): 477-506.Özet
Purpose – The relationships between the Big Five personality traits and life and job satisfaction have been
examined extensively. Despite this attention, however, most existing theories focus on a few global dimensions
of the Big Five while relying primarily upon a selection of theoretically relevant but unmeasured facets to
illuminate their factor-level explanations. The purpose of this paper is to examine personality – satisfaction
relationships for job and life domains at the facet level to better identify and explain why certain global Big Five
traits consistently relate to satisfaction, taking both factors and facets into account.
Design/methodology/approach – Data from over 20 specific occupational samples were pooled metaanalytically to examine personality facet of job/life satisfaction relationships and their generalizability. Bifactor
latent variable modeling using meta-analytic input was used to examine independent contributions of general
and unique personality facets.
Findings – The dominance facet of extraversion, low self-esteem facet of neuroticism, and responsibility
facet of conscientiousness were most closely related to satisfaction variables. There were independent
contributions of general and unique facet level personality – satisfaction relations for the neuroticism and
conscientiousness domains, but not for the extraversion domain.
Research limitations/implications – Findings contribute to the literature on the bandwidth – fidelity
dilemma in measuring personality and theories involving personality at work.
Originality/value – This study established the generalizability of Big Five traits – satisfaction relations
and identified the empirically supported personality paths to understanding job and life satisfaction.
This study also demonstrated how meta-analysis can be combined with bifactor models to understand
substantive relations.